"I was just ecstatic," Reeder told Business Insider. "Those moments in your life just come up so rarely."

The animal was seen for the first (and last) time in 1939, but the bat's unique stripes led the discovering scientist to misidentify it as a member of the Glauconycteris genus.

"We figured out eventually that it was the same as this thing that had been described in the Congo in 1939," Reeder said. "And it was given a name at that time that was Glauconycteris superba, and I know the other animals in this genus Glauconycteris pretty well and when I had this animal in my hand in the field I knew there was no way it belonged to that group."

Reeder brought it back to the Smithsonian and examined it. After about an hour, she and a colleague decided the bat was so different from every other species that it needed its own genus.

So, instead of Glauconycteris superba, Reeder called it Niumbaha superba, to honor the local Zande people, who live in the region of South Sudan where Reeder does her research.

South Sudan had been embroiled in conflict for decades before achieving independence in 2011. Very little of the country has been developed, and scientists have only recently been able to safely do research in the forests. Reeder thinks her rare badger bat is only a sign of all of the new discoveries scientists will make in the area.

"What it highlights is that there is so much about African biodiversity, particularly sub-Saharan African biodiversity that we just don't know," Reeder said.

The bat was euthanized and preserved, and now is available at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C. for researchers to study.